Understanding the law, and how it governs a library’s existence, is
central to realizing our mission, vision and values. Libraries in their
traditional form have existed for centuries. With the advent of digital
technology, libraries have evolved past their physical spaces to new
modes of existence, no longer tethered to the traditional four walls of
the library building. Beyond this physicality, libraries also exist
within legal constructs - ordinances, regulations, statutes and more -
which also govern our existence. The “law of libraries” creates both
opportunities and limitations related to the libraries’ core mission -
to acquire and provide access to the bounty of materials and information
that make up culture. This mission includes programs such as
preservation, access, digitization, and sharing the fruits of these
efforts with patrons, users, researchers, the public, and future
generations.
Join us for a lively talk surrounding a forthcoming
publication that will briefly discuss the history of libraries through
the lens of the law, and also attempt to answer these questions: What
makes a library a library? And how does the law define, constrain, and
empower libraries to complete their expansive mission? And why does this
matter more than ever in the digital age?
Join Library Futures
Board Members Kyle Courtney (Harvard University), Tucker Taylor (Journal
of Copyright in Librarianship and Education), and Dick Kawooya, PhD.
(University of South Carolina) for this lively discussion and
presentation.
Links shared:
Check out the Library Futures Annual Report: https://www.libraryfutures.net/annual-report-2021
The 50 State Library Survey: https://openscholarship.wustl.edu/pollib/vol2/iss2/8/
Marrakesh Treaty https://www.wipo.int/marrakesh_treaty/en/
Study of Copyright Limitations and Exceptions for Libraries and Archives by Kenneth Crews https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1415012